Lindy Brady
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The Welsh borderlands in the Lives of St Guthlac
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St. Guthlac's life is first recorded in the early eighth-century Vita Sancti Guthlaci written by a monk named Felix. This chapter argues that Felix's Vita Sancti Guthlaci and the anonymous Old English poem Guthlac A are evidence for a mixed Anglo-Welsh culture in the borderlands in the eighth century. The importance of warfare to Guthlac's identity is famously reflected in his name. Guthlac's role as the leader of a warband whose members are of mixed ethnicity is a further testament to the mixed Anglo-Welsh culture of the borderlands. Although Guthlac's battles with demons have been understood to reflect Anglo/Welsh ethnic division, Guthlac A displays a far more ambivalent attitude, reflecting the fluid boundaries of the Welsh borderlands. Postcolonial critics have understood Guthlac's legend as reflecting a nascent sense of Anglo-Saxon colonial aspiration, with the Mercian saint a successful embodiment of Anglo-Saxon land conquest over native British resistance.

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